The Grove features products from the acclaimed Drexler/Sibbet Team Performance Model®. + Team Improvement. Team Performance Model Abstract - PDF. Allan Drexler and David Sibbet spent nine years refining a comprehensive model of team performance that shows the predictable stages involved in both creating and sustaining teams. The Drexler/Sibbet Team Performance™ model illustrates team development in seven “lenses,” four to create the team and three to describe levels of performance. The Drexler/Sibbet Team Performance Model® (co-developed by Allan Drexler and David Sibbet) illustrates team development as seven stages, four to create the team and three to achieve increasing levels of sustained performance. The Model is widely used with as a framework and common language for supporting a team-based culture using The Grove’s Team Performance System.
Team Performance Model – by Drexler and Sibbet
Many of you have all heard of the Tuckman model of team dynamics (Forming, Storming, Norming, Performing). It was created in 1966 and has become the most popular model for describing team behavior. Is it time to level up in your mental model of team dynamics? Are you ready for a richer more functional model?
Introducing the Team Performance Model by Drexler and Sibbet
Orientation – Why am I here?
“Orientation is about understanding the purpose of a team and assessing what it will mean to be a member. you need to understand the reason the team exist, what will be expected of you and how you will benefit from membership. In a new team, these are individual concerns, because the group is only potentially a team. that is why these concerns are illustrated as occurring in your imagination at an intuitive level. As a team leader it is important to provide time and space for people to answer these internal questions themselves.”
Keys to when Orientation challenges are resolved:
– Team Purpose – Team Identity – Membership
Blocked teams at stage 1 Orientation may show…
– Uncertainty – disorientation – Fear
Trust Building – Who are you?
“Trust is a measure of your willingness to work together with others for something important. Because team members have to depend on each other to be successful, trust is essential in direct relation to how much cooperation is needed to get the job done. In the beginning of a new team’s live, trust involves some risk and uncertainty about dealing with strangers. This is why the key question is “Who are you?” An unstated aspect of this question is wondering, “What will you expect from me?” For a team to work well, you need to accept that you can depend on team members to work together to accomplish the team’s purpose.”
The Grove features products from the acclaimed Drexler/Sibbet Team Performance Model®. + Team Improvement. Team Performance Model Abstract - PDF. Drexler/Sibbet Team Performance ® Model A comprehensive tool for understanding the stages of team development. Allan Drexler and David Sibbet spent 10 years refining a comprehensive model of team performance that shows the predictable stages involved in both creating and sustaining teams.
Keys to when trust challenges are resolved:
– Mutual regard – forthrightness – Reliability
When a team is Blocked at stage 2, members may show…
– Caution – Facade – Mustrust
Goal Clarification – What are we doing?
Sometimes teams have precise charters that specify what they are responsible for accomplishing. More often, they are given a broad mandate and nee to make choices about how they will pursue that mandate and translate it into goals. “What are we doing?” is a more specific question than the larger question of purpose asked during Orientation. During this stage of a new team’s life, it will need to do research and develop clear understanding of the job that is required, as well as generate agreements about goals and specific deliverables.”
Keys to when goal clarification challenges are resolved:
– Explicit Assumptions – Clear integrated goals – Shared vision
Blocked at stage 3, members may show….
– Apathy and skepticism – Irrelevant competition
Commitment – How will we do it?
“When goals are clear and options are identified, your team is probably eager to act. Attention moves to the question, “How will we do it?” this stage occurs at the bottom of the “V” in the TPM, the point of the greatest constraint. This means committing to a specific course of action, making decisions about resources, and being clear about roles. These are also the indicators of having addressed the “turn”. Remember that the initial stages of team performance involve a good bit of trial-and-error. Embracing these questions might require backtracking to goals, investing more in trust development, and revisiting initial purpose before you can fully resolve commitment issues.”
Keys to when commitment challenges are resolved
– assigned roles “As your team turns toward implementation everyone will want to be clear about roles and responsibilities. You may have considered these during stage three planning, but now need to commit to what your function, authority, and responsibilities will be in practice. Role definitions have to be complete enough to cover all the tasks that must be done to accomplish your team goals while minimizing overlaps and role conflicts. A big part of your job if you are the team leader is to help match goals to competencies, and help people step into roles that will develop their abilities and improve results for the team.”
– allocated resources
“In addition to role clarity, your team must deal with another constraint – how to provide for and deploy its limited resources, including time, money, and so forth. These hard choices usually involve setting aside some useful tasks because the resources are not available to support them. Indecision in this area breeds confusion and stalls work. For virtual teams, decisions about tools and communication platforms are essential at this stage. Teams may have to negotiate with the larger organization to get the kind of tools and support they need. This is why the TPM intersects the organization “platform” at this stage.”
– decision made
“Finally, a team needs to get clear about how members will handle decision making. Will authority be shared? How will you stay in touch with one another? Who can spend what funds? In a dynamic work environment where plans can change frequently, decision about course corrections are common. Thinking through in advance how these will be handled moves the team’s focus more productively toward implementation and high performance.”
Challenges at stage 4, members may show…
– dependence – resistance
Implementation – Who does what, when, where?
“Implementation involves scheduling and sequencing work over time. The key question is “Who does what, when, and where?” A visible schedule, strategy, and / or process liberates the team to move into action confidently. Conflicts and confusion arise when there is commitment but no clear way forward.”
Keys to when Implementation challenges are resolved:
– clear processes – alignment – disciplined execution
Team’s blocked at stage 5, member may show…
– Conflict – Nonalignment – missed deadlines
High Performance – WOW!
“High performance is a WOW state, as a team masters its processes and begins to experience the ability to change goals as well as achieve them. You can feel when it happens and observe its effects, buy not necessarily control it. Teams achieve a flow state when trust is high and people have mastered their roles. In a state of high performance, boundaries and individual limits soften, everything moves together, and everyone responds as if they are part of the whole. The indicators of that having happened are spontaneous interaction, synergy, and a team that is surpassing their expectation on results. WOW symbolizes how high performance teams transcend rational processes by working with all the human faculties – spirt, soul, mind, and body.”
keys to when High Performance challenges are resolved:
– spontaneous Interaction – synergy – surpassing results
When a team is blocked at stage 6, members may show…
– Overload – Disharmony
Renewal – Why continue?
“Over time the conditions that initially set your team in motion will change. High Performances is demanding. Don’t be surprised if people ask, “Why continue?” this key question reminds us that team performance is an ongoing process, and must be renewed by returning to Stage 1 and reassessing if the work is still needed, worthwhile, and has some personal value and meaning. Spending time on renewal puts your team back in touch with meaning and purpose and refreshes everyone’s commitment to keep going. It also includes learning from what you have accomplished, and building a repertoire of best practices for the next journey on this or other teams. If your team’s work is completed, Renewal is the time to wrap things up, freeing members to move on to new challenges.”
Keys to when renewal challenges are resolved:
– recognition and celebration – managing change – staying power
When team’s are blocked at stage 7, members may show…
– boredom – burnout
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This is just a taste of the awesomeness of Sibbet’s book on visualizations and exercises to build great teams. Want to know more – read the book. You will learn lots about how team move forward and backward toward performance. And the exercises to work with teams to help them share their understand of where they are, where they are going and what might set them back are very well explained.
Reference: Visual Teams – Graphic tools for commitment, innovation, & high performance by David Sibbet.
See Also:
Drexler Sibbet Team Performance Model Ppt
Jay W. Vogt of Peoplesworth explains the Drexler Sibbet Model of team building and how it can result in a positive outcome. YouTube
![]() 7 levels of Delegation exercise Sibbet discusses the origins of the TPM – SketchTalk
The 7 Stages of Developing a High Performance Team
Developing a team can be one of the largest challenges a leader can face. Balancing commitment, skill sets, communication and end goals can be overwhelming if there is no roadmap for progressing the teams development.
Thankfully Allan Drexler and David Sibbet, developed a framework for understanding team development that provides all of us with a stepwise approach to team building. The Drexler/Sibbet Team Performance Model is based on the concept of a bouncing ball where we begin the team building process up in the air where the “ideas” live and bounce off the ground into “reality”.
The process begins with four stages of team creation where many times we bounce back and forth from one stage to the previous until our answers become more clear and realizations for involvement, commitment and the goals of the team are set:
1. Orientation– What is our mission and picture of success, and why am I here?
2. Trust Building– Who is with me here and what are the skill sets and competencies we bring to this team? Trust requires a relationship and takes time. 3. Goal Clarification– What are our targets and roles? What’s yours, mine and ours? 4. Commitment-How will we work together? Let’s get all in!
As we progress through the four stages of team creation we then reach the three stages of performance. In these stages we begin to implement and master our process becoming heavily invested in the task at hand:
5. Implementation– Who does what, when where? (By the way most people want to jump here right after forming, only to find out that we bounce back to earlier stages and are less productive)
6. High Performance– This is the time when we are literally reading the minds of our teammates, anticipating their needs and moves and becoming a seamless supportive unit. It makes us want to stay in this zone forever. This stage is what we call the “WOW” that results from having a high performance team. 7. Renewal– Just when you have it all figured out, things change. A new member has joined the team or a important member has left. Or perhaps there are changes coming from the external environment which have us question whether what we were doing in the past will enable us to be successful in the future. Its time to re-orient and begin the cycle again right back to stage 1. What is or mission or vision, and why am I here. Team Performance
This road map is invaluable for teams. What’s critical to remember is that when stages are unresolved teams are limited. When stages are resolved the sky’s the limit!
Drexler Sibbet Team Model Explanation
Concentrics works with groups in retreat settings and through personal coaching to help you deepen your understanding of how to progress through these stages. We guide leaders and member through coaching and group facilitation to become high performance teams. We would be pleased to help if you need support. Call us at 610-696-3950. Or e-mail us at [email protected].
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